Tuesday, March 17, 2015

When Upsets Mattered

The current state of college basketball has left fans with much to lament. As a whole, the sport has shifted to something unfamiliar. Where a complete college player once stood, a one-and-done kid now waits...for the NBA draft.

If you've followed college basketball for the last 15 years, its not difficult to notice this phenomenon. Major conferences have been realigned; rivalries have become lost; and most universities are now void of an identity. In addition, the "One-and-Done" rule has made a mockery of the NCAA-NBA relationship.

There was a time, however, when major universities had a basketball identity. The schools' identities were based on the visions of coaches. Coaches recruited athletes with a particular skill set to fit a mold, and team leadership cultivated and refined those skills to help develop the player and the program.

During the "team" era of college basketball, an upset by a mid-major (or smaller D-1 school) over a large state or private school was a rarity. It just didn't happen. Most large schools featured the best coaches and NBA prospects in their third or fourth year of eligibility, and the kids were simply more talented and more experienced than athletes from smaller schools.

Today, that has changed. The mid-major program now features the "team" mentality. Recruits starting in these programs are less athletic and, generally, less talented. but they are experienced (because they stay in school longer) and play as a unit.

Larger schools, on the other hand, feature the one-and-done kid who has no experience traveling during the grueling conference schedule, starting in a conference tournament, or facing the pressure of a single-game elimination NCAA tournament. Their skill set might fit into the competitive vision of the coach, but they are recruited as a means to a win. If you don't recruit one-and-done's at a major school, you're going to lose out on talent and, more than likely, lose your job. Development is a byproduct of the process.

So today, while most casual college basketball fans fill out their brackets and look forward to what they consider "upsets," I watch clips like these and reconsider the definition of the term.




Monday, March 16, 2015

The Game After "The Shot"

If you're a college hoops fan, you know that dreams die easy in March.

I can think of at least a dozen teams, with the pedigree to win a national championship, that bowed out far earlier than their talent and regular season record suggested. The NCAA tournament is mostly about matchups, but every once in awhile you run into a team that is just hot.

This was nearly the case for Duke in the semifinal of the 1992 Final Four.

Most everyone remembers the NCAA championship game between Duke and the Fab 5 (who were freshman at the time), and EVERYONE remembers the shot game in the East Regional finals against Kentucky...

But very few people remember the game between the games, the semifinal slug fest between the defending champion Duke Blue Devils and Bob Knight's hot Hoosiers. That Indiana team (with starters Damon Bailey, Matt Nover, and Calbert Cheaney) came into the tournament as a #2 seed and shot about 58%  from the floor for the year.

With a "just take it to the hole" strategy, Indiana shot nearly 60% from the floor in the first half. Duke trailed by as many as 12 and basically tried to hang around. The second half, led by a tremendous effort from the Duke bench, Duke's defense, and Cherokee Parks under the basket, made for a semifinal for the ages.




Sunday, February 24, 2013

Fate and the 1985 World Series

It's pretty well-documented that most Cardinal fans and Cardinal players blame Don Denkinger for their failure to secure the 1985 World Series after taking a 3-1 lead into Game 6.  As a Royals fan, I feel for Cardinal fan...but the Cardinals blew that game with or without the lead-off out.  As a matter of fact, Cardinal Manager Whitey Herzog can be seen arguing trivial balls and strikes with umpires throughout Game 6 (he wasn't doing his club many favors).

Let's Review:

After a grueling pitchers' duel saw the Cardinals take a 1-0 lead into the bottom of the ninth, the speedy George Orta chopped a Todd Worrel fastball up the first base line to Cardinal first baseman Jack Clark who tossed it to Todd Worrel as Worrel shifted over to cover the bag.  The throw beat the runner, but first base umpire Don Denkinger thought Todd Worrel's foot came off the bag.  Orta was called safe by Denkinger, and the play will forever be remembered as the bang-bang play heard round the world. 


What many people don't remember is that this play really meant nothing to the final outcome of the game (and certainly not the series) because you could easily blame the loss on a slew of subsequent Cardinal screw-ups that led to the eventual momentum-shifting, 2-run, walk-off RBI from Dane Iorg to send the series to a winner-take-all Game 7 (a game in which the Royals would win handily, 11-0).

It's also not well-known outside of St. Louis, Kansas City, and Los Angeles that fate was truly against this Cardinal club.  How else can you explain the Vince Coleman tarp incident in the NLCS.  Sure, the Cardinals won the 1985 NLCS 4-2, but who in the world can reasonably explain Vince Coleman's inability to evade an automated tarpauline inside Busch Stadium?


What impact did this have on the 1985 World Series?  Coleman stole 110 bases in the 1985 regular season and surely would have added another layer of complexity to the Cardinal offense build on speed and hitting.

Sorry, Jon Hamm.  Denkinger or no Denkinger, it wasn't meant to be.

Tuesday, February 19, 2013

The 1992 NBA Draft

One thing that I think has gone downhill over the past twenty years is the NBA Draft.  It seems like it is trying too hard to be the NFL Draft, which is actually way more complicated.  NFL teams can get an impact player 5 hours into the draft, while no one has any reason to watch the NBA Draft after the first ten minutes.

Anyway, heres a favorite moment

Friday, March 23, 2012

KU draws another easy road to the final Four

Kansas may have won the NCAA Tournament in 2008 but since then they have been incredibly lucky in that they have managed to only team that was a under a #9 seed over the past four years. Seriously!

2009 - As a #3 seed they played a #14, #11, and a #2
2010 - As a #1 seed they played a #16,  and a #9
2011 - As a #1 seed they played a #16, #9, #12, and a #11
2012 - As a #2 seed they have played a #15, a #10, and are currently playing a #11

Amazing

Tuesday, March 20, 2012

Royally Bad

There aren't many things as bad as the Kansas City Royals have been in the last two decades. 

Everytime I try to weigh how bad the team has been, I start to compare them to other monumentally bad things.  Like that time we were on that trip to the park with the neighbor lady and her kids, and my brother decided to use a run-off pond spillway as a water slide into a sewer (he was at least 14 years old).  Or when George Lucas had a slew of candidates and decided to choose Hayden Christianson to play Anakin Skywalker.  Or that time Tempest Bledsoe thought she would make a great talk show host and some TV executive agreed. Tempest who? (see the least popular child on the Cosby Show).

As often as I weigh bad ideas against it, nothing ever seems to compare to this...



Spring Training 2004 saw the Royals trying to improve on their only winning season in a decade, and it's obvious (now) the front office felt like they had some momentum with the Benito Santiago and oft-injured Juan Gonzalez signings.  Both veterans would fail to meet expectations (just like a Chris Gaines album I remember). 

So I guess it was simply par for the course when management decided to detract a weak defensive team from practicing fundamentals by allowing the country superstar to take BP and play left field in several intrasquad and exhibition games.  Granted it was for charity, but was this really a good decision for a team trying to shake off years of comical baseball?

What's worse is Garth actually had some mild success against Royals pitching (embarassing?).

In retrospect, Brooks previously attended spring training with the San Diego Padres in 1998 and the New York Mets in 2000, and the Padres and Mets each made it to and lost in the World Series in those respective years. 

The Royals, on the other hand, finished 2004 (a year in which many experts picked them to win their division) in fifth place in the AL Central with an abysmal 58-104 record, and 2003 MOY Tony Pena would resign after losing the faith of his players.

Friends in low places, huh?  I think I'm starting to get it.

Thanks a lot Garth.

2008 American League Championship Series - Game 7

I waited my entire life to see a game like this.  Critics will say this game meant nothing because the Phillies went on to win a short World Series (with a convicted PED user earning two of the victories), but baseball fans understand what a catalyst this game was for the future of a team that spent a decade in the doldrums only to compete with baseball's elite.  It's no coincidence that this Rays club, with many everyday players from 2008, would go on to win another AL East title in 2010 and lock-in a well-deserved WC berth in 2011.  Well done fellas.

I didn't create this montage, but there's no doubt in my mind it was made for me.


RIP Dad